Post on 07-Mar-2018
Revolution and Nationalism 1900-‐1939
Revolutions in RussiaSection 1• Long-‐term social unrest in Russia exploded in revolution, and ushered in the first Communist government.
Czars Resist ChangeRomanov Family
• Alexander III• Autocracy• Ruler held all the power
• Press limited• Secret police for high school and colleges• Teachers had to report on all students• Political prisoners sent to Siberia
Czars Resist Change
• Russian declared official language, banned Polish• Jews blamed for problems• Nicholas II becomes czar in 1894, continues autocratic rule
Russia Industrializes• Between 1863 and 1900 number of factories doubles• Still well behind western Europe• Sought foreign investors to help buildup country• France and Great Britain help them build the Trans-‐Siberian Railroad
Revolutionary Movement Grows
• Typical Industrialization problems• Working conditions, wages, and child labor
• Unions outlawed• Workers still struck
• Marxist ideas, father of Communism, spread• The workers, proletariat, would overthrow the czar and factory owners
Marxist Split
• Mensheviks• less radical, wanted broader reforms
• Bolsheviks• More radical• Led by Vladimir (Ilyhich Ulyanov) Lenin• Father of the Revolution• Fled to Europe (Switzerland) to avoid arrest
Crises at Home and Abroad
• Russo-‐Japanese War• Blood Sunday: The Revolution of 1905• World War I: The Final Blow
Russo-‐Japanese War• Control of Korea and Manchuria• Battle over warm water ports• Russia loses and is embarrassed
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Bloody Sunday: The Revolution of 1905• January 22, 1905 200,000 workers plea for better working conditions, more personal freedom, and an elected national legislature• Soldiers fire into crowd wounding 1,000 and killing hundreds• Leads to creation of the Duma, Russia’s 1stParliament• Dissolved after 10 weeks
World War I: The Final Blow• Germany had better guns and leaders• Russia only able to sustain because of its large population
• Yet again showed the Czar’s inability as a military leader• 1915 Czar Nicholas II moves his headquarters to the front to help inspire his troops• Left his wife, Czarina Alexandra to run the government• Officials and citizens were angry that Nicholas was not there to rule and that his wife listened to Rasputin
Rasputin• Self-‐described holy man and advisor to the royal family• Tried to get his friends elected into government positions• Opposed reform• Nobles have him murdered
World War I: Final Blow Continued
• Continual heavy losses• Soldiers begin to mutiny• Shortage of food and fuel supplies at home• Inflation in prices leads to people from all classes to call for change and an end to the war
March Revolution
• March 1917 women textile workers begin to strike and are joined by men• Soldiers initially shoot rioters but then side with them• Czar Nicholas II abdicates his throne• Nicholas and his family are executed
Provisional Government• Temporary government is setup by Duma• Decide to continue to fight the war• Soviets are set up• Local councils of workers, peasants, and soldiers• Had more power than the provisional government• Lenin is sent by Germany to help end the war
Bolshevik Revolution• “Peace, Land, and Bread”• Bolshevik Red Guards, armed factory workers, take the winter palace and topple the provisional government• Farmland was distributed amongst the peasants and control of the factories to the workers• Truce with Germany signed to end Russia’s involvement in WWI• Treaty of Brest-‐Litovsk, March 3, 1918
Civil War in Russia• Some Russians upset with Bolsheviks signing the Treaty of Brest-‐Litovsk and surrendering much land to Germany• Some mad with the murder of the royal family• Opponents of the Bolshevik formed the White Army• Pro-‐democracy, return to czarist rule, other socialists• Supported by Western countries
Civil War in Russia• 14 million died in the 3 year struggle and the famine that followed• Bolsheviks maintain power with help of Leon Trotsky who led most of the army
Causes and Effects of Two Russian Revolutions, 1917
Causes: Czarist Russia Effects/Causes:March Revolution
Effects: Bolshevik Revolution
Czar’s leadership was weak Czar abdicates Provisional government is overthrown
Revolutionary agitation challenges the government
Provisional government takes over. Lenin and soviets gain power.
Bolsheviks take over.
Widespread discontent found among all classes.
Russia stays in WWI Bolsheviks sign peace treaty with Germany and leave WWI. Civil war begins in Russia.
Lenin Restores Order• Country slowly recovers because Lenin keeps some capitalistic ideas• Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, U.S.S.R.• Local control that answered to a central government
• Communist Party• Held all the power• Supposed to be a classless society
Evolution of Communist Thought• Communism is a political and economic system of organization. Property is owned by the community and all citizens share in common wealth.
Marx Lenin
History was the story of classstruggle.
History was the story of class struggle.
Struggle between capitalists and the proletariat, or the
workers
Struggle was capitalists against the
proletariat and peasants
Proletariat’s numbers would
become so great & their condition so
poor thatrevolution would
occur
Proletariat and the peasants were not capable of leading a revolution and need
help from revolutionaries
Communal ownership of
wealth
Ruled by single, disciplined party, centrally directed administrators
Stalin Becomes Dictator• Lenin suffers a stroke• Struggle for power between Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky• Stalin using his ruthless ways takes total control of the Communist Party and exiles Trotsky
• People's Century Communism: The Promise and the Reality -‐ Red Flag: Communism in Russia
1. How did World War I help to bring about the Russian Revolution?
2. What groups made up the Red Army and the White Army?
3. Why did the Bolsheviks rename their party the Communist Party?
4. How did the czar’s autocratic policies toward the people lead to social unrest?
5. What do you think were Czar Nicholas II’s worst errors in judgment during his rule?
6. Which of the events during the last phase of czarist rule do you think was most responsible for the fall of the czar?
• http://www.studenthandouts.com/DBQ_Pages/DBQ-‐Russian-‐Revolution-‐1917-‐Vladimir-‐Lenin-‐What-‐Is-‐To-‐Be-‐Done-‐Primary-‐Source-‐Document.htm
• Discuss • Who was Lenin?• “What is to be done?”
• Write-‐• On the back of the graphic organizer
• Summarize the main point of the article in a couple of sentences.
Use evidence from the text to answer the following:1. Based on Lenin's writing and your own thoughts, why
had working-‐class people never developed their own economic philosophies?
2. Why do you think it was left to the "bourgeois intelligentsia" to transform the quest for working-‐class rights into a philosophy?
3. Lenin is here calling for unity among socialist thinkers, emphasizing that criticisms made by socialist thinkers against one another's thoughts strengthen the enemy ("bourgeois ideology"). Put in other words, Lenin is saying that when members of the group are seen disagreeing on their ideas and goals, this is used by the enemies of the group as proof that the group is wrong. Do you agree or disagree? Is it more important that a group (any group, not just the socialists of 1902) project a united front, or that the ideas of each member of a group be heard?
TotalitarianismSection 2• After Lenin died, Stalin seized power and transformed the Soviet Union into a totalitarian state.
A Government of Total Control• Totalitarianism• Government that takes total, centralized, state control over every aspect of public and private life
• Secret Police, Indoctrination, Propaganda, Censorship, Religious or Ethnic Persecution
Police Terror• Not to protect and serve • Ensure central government’s policies are being followed• Includes brute force, spying, intimidation, and murder
NKVD
Indoctrination• Instruction in the government’s beliefs• Control of education is essential• Unconditional loyalty and support
Propaganda and Censorship• Propaganda• Biased or incomplete information used to influence people’s opinions
• Control mass media• Must get government approval before printed or shown
Nikolai Yezhov, the disappearing Commissar
Religious or Ethnic Persecution• “Enemies of the state”• Someone to blame countries problems on• Blamed problems on the Russian Orthodox Church • Destroyed churches and synagogues
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, the largest Orthodox church ever built
Stalin Builds a Totalitarian State• No political dissent• Police State
• Informers, wire taps, reading mail• Great Purge, 1937, 8-‐13 million killed for being detrimental to the Communist Party
• Even those who helped with the Revolution killed
• Propaganda and Censorship• Education and Indoctrination
• Youth groups started• Religious Persecution
• Russian Orthodox Church • Tried to show that religions were superstitions
NEP
• New Economic Policy under Lenin was too slow for Stalin• NEP used some capitalistic ideas like allowing farmers to sell portions of their grain for their own profit
Stalin Seizes Control of the Economy• Command Economy• System in which the government makes all economic decisions
• Industrial Revolution• Five Year Plans
• Set impossible high quotas to increase steel, coal, oil and electricity
• Limited production of consumer goods
• Resulted in shortage of housing, food, and clothing
• Agricultural Revolution• Seized 25 million privately owned farms• Formed collective farms
• Large government owned farms
• 5-‐10 million die as a result• Kulaks, from Ukraine, resisted collectivization
Five Year Plans
Daily Life Under Stalin• Women better rights, people more educated, and new technical skills obtained• Bolshevik Revolution claimed all men and women equal• By 1950, 75% of doctors in the Soviet Union are women• Motherhood considered patriotic duty
• Stalin Video
1. What are the key traits of a totalitarian state?2. What are some ways totalitarian rulers keep their power?3. How did the Soviet economy change under the direction of Stalin?4. How do totalitarian states and constitutional governments differ?5. Summarize Joseph Stalin’s rise to power and how his control
expanded?6. Were the Five-‐Year Plans the best way to move the Soviet economy
forward?7. Yellow 73-‐74